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Monday, May 4, 2015

Review: A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. Maas

Review:A Court of Thorns and Roses by Sarah J. MaasGoodreadsRelease date: May 5th, 2015Publisher: BloomsburyLength: 304 pagesSource: ARC from the publisherRating: Better than the first Throne of Glass *throws down gauntlet* I SAID IT. It's like if Cruel Beauty and Throne of Glass had a baby and that baby grew up to write Fifty Shades of Grimm and I don't even know what I'm saying anymore.

A thrilling, seductive new series from New York Times bestselling author Sarah J. Maas, blending Beauty and the Beast with faerie lore.

When
nineteen-year-old huntress Feyre kills a wolf in the woods, a
beast-like creature arrives to demand retribution for it. Dragged to a
treacherous magical land she only knows about from legends, Feyre
discovers that her captor is not an animal, but Tamlin—one of the
lethal, immortal faeries who once ruled their world.

As she
dwells on his estate, her feelings for Tamlin transform from icy
hostility into a fiery passion that burns through every lie and warning
she's been told about the beautiful, dangerous world of the Fae. But an
ancient, wicked shadow grows over the faerie lands, and Feyre must find a
way to stop it . . . or doom Tamlin—and his world—forever.

Perfect
for fans of Kristin Cashore and George R. R. Martin, this first book in
a sexy and action-packed new series is impossible to put down!

A Court of Faerie and Tale
There are two things I love dearly in this world (well, more than two, but these are two of them): fairy tale-related things, and Sarah J. Maas books. Sarah was kind enough to mash these things up for me (THANKS, SARAH) by retelling my all-time favorite fairy tale, Beauty and the Beast. Of course, she did it in typical Sarah fashion, which means it's dark, bloody, sensual, and completely, one hundred percent seductive. I read this book in a passioned frenzy, which means I'm really not the most objective of reviewers right now, because most of what I can remember from it is OMGOMGOMG. SQUEE.

A Court of Feyre the Bad Ass
I have to start my review with the center of the story, our Beauty, Feyre. LOVE this girl. She's very different from Celaena. She's determined and passionate and ready to give her whole heart, if someone would just take it (also she has my hair color, so that's endearing). She's the caretaker of her family, the hunter, shouldering all the responsibility, though she's only nineteen.

One winter day while out hunting, she shoots a wolf...who turns out to be a Fae in disguise, ventuing south into the human lands across the wall that divides them from the Faerie Realms.

BACK UP BITCHES FEYRE DON'T PLAY

A (beastly) Fae by the name of Tamlin arrives at her door, demanding Feyre come live forever in the Faerie realm in retribution for the life she took. This is not remotely a tempting offer, since Faeries once enslaved humans and are notoriously cruel and callous towards them and enjoy torturing them and that sort of fun stuff.

Feyre has an incredible arc over the book, growing into the sort of character who takes control of her own fate and battles for what she wants. I especially loved her struggle with her inability to read. It's not often we get illiterate heroines.

A Court of Boys and More Boys
Because this is Exactly My Type of Book, in this world Fae are aggressively hot
individuals who live in fancy courts and have fancy magicks and tragic
backstories. There's Tamlin, ferociously hot lord of the Spring Court, brooding and forbidding but...sensitive and passionate. There's Lucien, who... hee, Lucien. And then there's the last boy, the question mark, the dark one whose motives are unclear and whose methods are MESSY, to say the least, and I'll let you make up your mind about him.

Rhysand arrives on the scene to confuse your heart

But this book is crushingly, bruisingly, achingly romantic. And not just romantic. It's COMPLETELY HOT.A Court of HOT and HOTTER
SAR. AH. You made me feel EMBARRASSED reading this book! (In a good way). As in put the book down, wide-eyed, and glanced around my completely empty apartment to make sure no one could somehow see inside my thoughts and see what I was reading and understand where my blush came from but also I reread all those scenes like eight times and fanned myself with the book and YEP THERE'S A REASONS FEYRE IS NINETEEN FOLKS.

A Court of Lush and Imaginative
I loved the worldbuilding in this book. You know I love me some Throne of Glass, but ACOTAR's worldbuilding has a really lovely clarity and cohesion and magic to it. It's so vast and visual, and that's helped by Sarah's prose, which is--YAY--in first person! I love first person. I love who completely inside Feyre's head we are, and I think the breathtaking, lyrical writing really served the reader.

Feyre starts out at Tamlin's Court, the Spring Court, but behind the beautiful green gardens and marble halls lies a curse. Dark creatures roam the forest. All the Fae denizens wear masks that seem permanently affixed to their faces. And even as Tamlin and Feyre grow closer and closer and neckbitingly closer, Feyre realizes there are huge secrets he's not telling her about the fate of the Fae world... and the fate of the Feyre world (see what I did there).

A Court of Dark and Twisted
Yeppp, this book is not for people who like their fairy tales squeaky
clean, that is for sure. I'm not normally one for Fae books, but the
way Sarah does them is so completely my thing. They are Fucked Up,
capitals intended, particularly the ones under the mountain. It's like
the movie Labyrinth crossed with...idk, a BDSM dungeon, and then
the Spring Court was like IDK wiccan hippie orgy rave??? I LOVED IT.
Crazy freaking book, man. What a trip. I can't even word good about it.

look IDK Beast you try writing reviews it's hard

I think the moment I tumbled headfirst into the plot--the point of no return, no going to bed, goodbye, I will go down with this heroine--was when Feyre went Under the Mountain. Can't say ANY of the context, but it was the moment when my brain just LIT UP on this book and I couldn't get enough.

let out those Beast feeeeelings

Like I said, I read this book in a mad, heady rush, and not only that, I read it in December, well before more of the hype around it had built. Whether or not that contributed to my OMGAH feels, I can't say, but I'm drunk in love with ACOTAR and don't particarly care to analyze why. (In fact, I super DON'T want to analyze why I am so into every fucked up treat this book has to offer.) (Though I will admit, the answer to the riddle was blindingly obvious.) There were probably some problematic thingamabobs (ooo, did things get...iiiiiinteresting Under the Mountain *looks at Rhysand*) but honestly, I was reading so fast and hungrily that I probably stormed right past them. I was totally caught up in the intoxicating lure of this book and Sarah's imagery and my burning Team Feyre-ness.

BOOK TWO, WHAT IS EVEN GOING TO HAPPEN IN YOU???? AND WHY MUST I WAIT?

"BOOK TWO, WHAT IS EVEN GOING TO HAPPEN IN YOU???? AND WHY MUST I WAIT?" ---- MY THOUGHTS EXACTLY. I love how splendidly Sarah tied up most of the loose ends at the end of ACOTAR, but I now feel like I'm in the dark when it comes to speculating on what happens in the next one. I neeeeeed Lucien- I mean, I need the next book.

Holy ish, your enthusiasm has got to be one of my most favorite things in the book blogger-verse. :) To be honest, yours is also the first positive review I've read, too! I'm hoping I'll appreciate it on your level... Ms. Maas is a goddess and can do no wrong in my book... or any of hers.

This review is the best. I'm so pumped for this book and your enthusiasm made me even more excited (if that's even possible because hello it's a Sarah J. Maas book it has to be awesome). I can't wait until this lands on my doorstep.

I already told you how PERFECT your Beast picture for Rhys is. It's literally perfect. And omg I just love Beast/ Beauty and the Beast gifs. Be still my heart <3 I love the courts, you're always so on the money. Even your flails are just eloquent and fun and make me want to read everythinggggg. "But this book is crushingly, bruisingly, achingly romantic. And not just romantic. It's COMPLETELY HOT." YES. ABSOLUTELY. Agree with Christina's comment above, I trust Sarah in all ways to make things right. Case in point: I am not a Rhys fan (there, I said it) but I trust her storytelling so we will see. Though if my Feylin gets effed up in any way.... there will be hell to pay. "It's like the movie Labyrinth crossed with...idk, a BDSM dungeon, and then the Spring Court was like IDK wiccan hippie orgy rave??? " THIS IS THE TRUEST THING I HAVE EVER READ OMG. IT WAS INSANE. But I liked it. I have no idea what's going to happen in book 2 but I can't wait to find out. I also can't wait to reread this and picture Chris Hemsworth as Tamlin. Brain, why didn't you think of that the first time around???

Also. I have a theory/idea/THING. Let me know what you think. Do you think it's possible that Erilea/Wendlyn could exist in the same world as Prythian/the mortal lands? I guess it made me think when she was in the library looking at the maps and noticing how big the world is and also OH YEAH THERE'S AN EVIL KING ON AN ISLAND. I'm not saying I want the series to cross over but it would be so badass if they did exist in the same space. Esp since they are both Fae books in a way.

Honestly, I can't get enough of your reviews! You make me want to read EVERYTHING.Two things, though: a. this review is not in your archive. Pointing it out because I wanted to see if you've read book #2 and realized neither is in your archive (book #2 because, obviously, you haven't reviewed it). b) I'm really looking forward to you review of book #2 , though, because I heard some whispers about the ships that worry me and keep me from reading this series, and I know if there is one person I can trust to ship it to me straight, it's you!